George Bush's second inaugural extravaganza was every bit as
repugnant as I had expected, a vulgar orgy of triumphalism probably
unmatched since Napoleon crowned himself emperor of the French in
Notre Dame in 1804.
The little Corsican corporal had a few decent victories to his
escutcheon. Lodi, Marengo, that sort of thing. Not so this
strutting Texan mountebank, with his chimpanzee smirk and his
born-again banalities delivered in that constipated syntax that
sounds the way cold cheeseburgers look, and his grinning plastic
wife, and his scheming junta of neo-con spivs, shamans, flatterers
and armchair warmongers, and his sinuous evasions and his brazen
lies, and his sleight of hand theft from the American poor, and his
rape of the environment, and his lethal conviction that the world
must submit to his Pax Americana or be bombed into charcoal.
Difficult to know what was more repellent: the estimated $US40
million cost of this jamboree (most of it stumped up by Republican
fat-cats buying future presidential favours), or the sheer
crassness of its excess when American boys are dying in the
quagmire of Bush's very own Iraq war.
Other wartime presidents sought restraint. Abraham Lincoln's
second inaugural address in 1865 - "with malice toward none, with
charity for all" - is the shortest ever. And he had pretty much won
the Civil War by that time.
In 1944, Franklin Delano Roosevelt opened his fourth-term speech
with the "wish that the form of this inauguration be simple and its
words brief". He spoke for a couple of eloquent minutes, then went
off to a light lunch, his wartime victory almost complete as
well.
But restraint is not a Dubya word. Learning nothing, the dumbest
and nastiest president since the scandalous Warren Harding died in
1923, Bush is now intent on expanding the Iraq war to neighbouring
Iran.
Condoleezza Rice did admit to the US Senate this week that there
had been some "not so good" decisions. But the more I see of her
gleaming teeth and her fibreglass helmet of hair and her perky
confidence, the more I am convinced that back in the '60s she used
to be Cindy Birdsong, up there beside Diana Ross as one of the
Supremes of Motown fame. I don't think it's a good idea to let her
make a comeback as Secretary of State.
The war in Iran is under way already, if we believe Seymour
Hersh, the distinguished investigative writer for The New
Yorker magazine.
Hersh reported this week that clandestine US special forces have
been on the ground there, targeting nuclear facilities to be bombed
whenever Bush feels the time is ripe.
"The immediate goals of the attacks would be to destroy, or at
least temporarily derail, Iran's ability to go nuclear," he wrote,
quoting reliable intelligence sources.
"But there are other, equally purposeful, motives at work. The
government consultant told me that the hawks in the Pentagon, in
private discussions, have been urging a limited attack on Iran
because they believe it could lead to a toppling of the religious
leadership."
Naturally, Pentagon flacks rushed out to deny all. But then they
did that when Hersh broke the story of the My Lai massacre in
Vietnam in 1968, and again when he revealed the torture of Iraqi
prisoners at Abu Ghraib. A tussle for the truth between Hersh and
the Pentagon is no contest.
What terrifies me most is the people planning this new war. The
CIA professionals have been frozen out: too weak and wimpy for the
Bushies.
The Defence Secretary, the incompetent Donald Rumsfeld, has
seized control, aided by two Pentagon under-secretaries. One is
Douglas Feith, a mad-eyed Zionist largely responsible for the
post-invasion collapse of order in Iraq, a civilian bureaucrat
memorably described by the former Centcom commander, General Tommy
Franks, as "the f---ing stupidest guy on the face of the
Earth".
The other is army Lieutenant General William G. (Jerry) Boykin,
whose name also rings a bell. Jerry is a born-again Christian
evangelical, a three-star bigot who, in his spare time, stumps the
country in full uniform, preaching that America's enemy is Satan,
Allah is a false idol, and that George Bush has been ordained by
the Lord to rout evil.
"He's in the White House because God put him there for a time
such as this," Jerry told a prayer meetin' in Oregon just a while
back.
Be very afraid.
© 2005 The Sydney Morning Herald
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